Clashes in Senegal as Wade seek third term


  1. Buya Jammeh, AfricaNews reporter in Dakar, Senegal
    Clashes have erupted in Senegal's capital Dakar and several other city cities ; after the Constitutional Council said President Abdoulaye Wade could run for a third term in next month's poll. A police officer has made his untimely death during clashes with civil society and opposition suppers in the central Dakar
    Wade
    Angered by the decision, protesters threw stones at riot police, who responded by firing tear gas.

    Wade, 85, has already served two terms. But the constitution was amended since he was last elected, and he has argued the law is not retroactive.

    In its ruling, the court rejected barred famous singer Youssou N'Dour with two other candidates from running saying that they has not submitted the required amount 10;000 signatures to qualify his candidacy.

    The Senegalese singer and his rejected colleagues has appealed against the constitutional council’s decision; adding they has submitted over 13; 000 signatures to meet the criteria for next month’s presidential polls.


    The opposition had earlier warned it would hold street protests if Mr. Wade's candidacy was approved, and crowds had gathered in central Dakar to await the ruling.

    After the decision came through, youths in the area around Place de l'Obelisque set fire to tyres and engaged in running battles with police.


    The authorities said the protest would be tolerated in spite of an official ban on demonstrations.

    The constitutional court's statement, issued late on Friday, listed 14 candidates - including Mr Wade - as eligible to stand in the 26 February election.

    Mr Wade - who came to power in 2000 and was re-elected in 2007 - has insisted that as his first term pre-dated the 2001 constitutional change establishing the two-term limit he is not affected by it.

    The list of candidates also includes Idrissa Seck, Macky Sall and Moustapha Niasse and the main opposition leader Ousmane Tanor Dieng.

    The court ruled that Youssou N'Dour's candidacy was invalid because he had not gathered the required number of signatures.

    The Grammy award-winning musician announced he would stand earlier this month, saying "the people are fed up with career politicians who almost all enriched themselves with the state's money".

    For his part, Wade filed a petition with the Commission to withdraw applications of Macky Sall, Idrissa Seck and Cheikh Tidiane Gadio, if they don’t show any proof that they have no outstanding arrears with the tax authorities.

    Youths at Place de l'Obelisque said they planned to turn the square into the equivalent of Egypt's Tahrir Square if Mr Wade's candidacy was allowed to go ahead.
    Senegal is seen as one of the most democratic and stable countries in West Africa - it is the only country in the region never to have experienced a military coup.

    However, tension is rising ahead of the election and one prominent politician has been charged with murder.

    The international community including the United states of America; European Union and a group African Diaspora Observers has called for; adding that Senegalese should respect the decision of the country’s Constitutional Court.

    They called on all stakeholders to maintain the long tradition in history of peaceful democratic transitions of power.

    Attacks on the press

    The state own Radio Television Senegal (RTS) branch in Kaolack has also been ransacked angry protest following the announcement of the Constitutional Council confirming that President Wade can run for the presidency.

    Sidy Lamin Niass the proprietor of Walfajiri Media Company allegedly he has been threaten by the authorities to stop broadcasting such event or risk annulment of his license.

    In a television Mr. Niass said he is not the least taken aback by the said threat against his media group; adding that their work is guided by journalistic principles and they will never concede to such cowardly actions.


Reactions

  1. Image of lhauri


    116 berichten
    Lid sinds February 2012


    I know what you mean. I have the same opinion. It is a nice initiative and I am sure that you will have followers. yacht charter turkey


  2. Image of peter89


    18 berichten
    Lid sinds April 2012


    Its gonna be getting worst.Elections in Senegal have always been full of actiona and i am sure many politician would be having headaches because of it.And to overcome this headache they sometime takes acetaminophen overdose and suffer from minor liver problem.


  3. Image of peter89


    18 berichten
    Lid sinds April 2012


    He deserves the third term.He has done a tremendous job in getting Senegal back in shape.THe journey has not been easy for him and have many times suffered from
    ibuprofen overdose and then to overcome all this,he deserves the 3rd term



Latest News

  1. Ghana: Foreign retailers cited for currency…18/05The Ghana Union of Traders Association (GUTA) is attributing the sharp depreciation of the Ghana cedi against major currencies to the illegal activiti…
  2. Kenya: Community radio brings succour to…18/05Korogocho, a slum in northeastern Nairobi with 100,000 inhabitants, had many of the ingredients for a political explosion similar to those that rocked…
  3. Veld fires 'flame' Zimbabwe's…16/05Over the years, Zimbabwe has experienced the scourge of veld fires destroying property worth thousands of dollars.
  4. Vanishing Lake Chad puts 30m lives at risk14/05As you approach the Lake Chad basin from Maiduguri, in north-eastern Nigeria, the evidence of despair is telling.
  5. Heavy rains cause havoc in Kenya14/05Heavy Rainfall continued to wreak havoc across the country leading to the suspension of relief food in some parts of the country as most roads in Turk…
  6. Zimbabwe: Growth points lie dormant14/05The Zimbabwean government mooted the concept of growth points in the 1980s as a means of decongesting cities and towns.
  7. Sierra Leone improves in infant mortality11/05Sierra Leone has improved in infant mortality cases according to Save the Children- World Motherhood index 2012 report. The West Africa country descri…
  8. Zimbabwe: Resettled farmers fail to utilize…10/05Resettled farmers in Zimbabwe are failing to utilize land due to inadequate farming inputs and lack of resources.
  9. Algerians vote in parliamentary election10/05Polls have opened in Algeria for parliamentary elections which the authorities have billed as more free and transparent than ever before.
  10. Sierra Leone: Girl 13, dedicates life to…08/05Annette Sam, now 13 was diagnosed with a hole in the heart in 2006. His father a teacher by then could not afford funds to treat the young Annette.
  11. African traders benefit from e-commerce08/05For three years, Kossi Serge has been buying various items in Hong Kong and China for resale in his native African country of Togo.
  12. Mobile phones revolutionize HIV testing in…07/05Mobile phones are transforming the way HIV test results are being transmitted to AIDS patients in Africa, a study has shown.
  13. Zimbabwe: Sand poaching out of control04/05The house building boom across Harare, Zimbabwe has caused land degradation as the scramble for building sand has fuelled rampant sand poaching.
  14. Sierra Leone attains Guinness World Record04/05The small West African nation of Sierra Leone is the latest African country to scoop the enviable Guinness World Record.
  15. "Mali a serious threat to regional…04/05Special Representative of the United Nations Office Secretary General for West Africa (UNOWA), Said Djinnit, has said the political and military crisi…
News archive